E.A. Johnston warns that many in the church are hypocrites deceived by false assurance, urging true repentance and a foundation built on genuine faith in Christ.
In this heartfelt sermon, E.A. Johnston exposes the danger of hypocrisy within the church, highlighting how many are deceived by false assurances of salvation. Drawing from Scripture and personal testimony, Johnston challenges listeners to examine their faith and build their lives on the solid rock of genuine repentance and obedience to Christ. This message serves as a sobering call to avoid empty religious professions and embrace true transformation through the Holy Spirit.
Full Transcript
Heavenly Father, it is my prayer that you speak to hearts today and break apart any and every false foundation of an empty religious profession, and that you reveal Christ to folks today so they can see a blood-stained Savior from sin and find salvation in Him. I pray, dear God, that your Holy Spirit will disturb the hypocrite today and show him his danger of dying in his sins and being cast into the outer darkness of hell itself. I pray these things in the strong name of Jesus.
Amen. Well, nobody likes to be called a hypocrite. It infers that you say you are one way when really you are quite another.
We don't like dishonest politicians or bad cops. I remember years ago I had a Southern Baptist Sunday School teacher who was a legalist, and for three weeks he preached to us the evils of Disney and that we should all boycott Disney TV shows because they were all perverts, and we should all boycott their theme parks as well. And then this man went on vacation, and one of our class members ran into him with his family at Disney World.
Well, that man was talking out of both sides of his mouth, and he got caught. Like I said, nobody likes a hypocrite, but oftentimes a religious hypocrite can't see themselves for what they are, and that's deceived. If you ask them how they got saved, they can usually point to a time in their life when they responded to an emotional appeal and made some kind of public profession of faith, either walking the Nile to accept Jesus or raising their hand or repeating a prayer.
But usually they can point back to a time in their life when they got some kind of religion, but they are yet strangers to work grace upon the heart in regeneration. Some were in their past. They just made an empty religious profession and a mental flip for Jesus and joined the church.
Some folks even think salvation is found in church membership. People get the craziest ideas on what salvation is. I used to have a friend who claimed he was saved because he was out in the woods sitting there one day thinking about God, and an owl appeared to him in a tree, and this man mistook that owl as a sign from God that he was now a saved individual.
But that owl didn't give a hoot in hell whether that man was saved or lost. But nonetheless, our churches are full of the unconverted who are religious but lost, and that makes them hypocrites. They are victims of the modern easy-believe gospel.
Somewhere an evangelist told them all they had to do to have Jesus was to have faith like you would trust in a chair to support you. They say something along these lines. Friend, you believe that chair you're sitting in can support you.
That's why you sat on it. Well, that's like faith in Christ. All you have to do is have faith in that chair, just like that, and have faith in Jesus, just like that as well.
But listen, friend, that's a lie because an atheist trusts a chair to support him as well. Faith in a chair is not saving faith in Christ Jesus. So many are misled by modern evangelistic tactics into thinking they are saved when they are not.
The foolish virgins were deceived and they ended up outside of Christ, but it was too late for them then. The sad reality is a good percentage of our churches today are flooded with hypocrites. I recall a story about a country evangelist who would bring his pony with him onto the preaching platform in a church as an evangelistic exhibition.
He would ask the pony, how many disciples did Jesus have? And the pony would tap out 12 with his hoof on the platform. Then the evangelist would ask the pony how many commandments there were. And the pony would tap out 10 with his hoof on the platform.
Just then, a smart aleck teenager sitting on the front row called out, Hey pony, how many hypocrites are in this church? And just then, the pony broke into a little dance. Well, the title of my message today, friends, is Hypocrites in the Church. Some folks have a hope of heaven, but it's nothing more than a hole in the wall.
You see, friends, one can build on sand without a sure foundation, but it won't hold up long. In Luke's Gospel, in chapter 6, we read, beginning in verse 46, And why call ye me, Lord, Lord, and do not the things which I say? Whosoever cometh to me, and heareth my sayings, and doeth them, I will show you to whom he is like. He is like a man which built an house, and digged deep, and laid the foundation on a rock.
And when the flood arose, the stream beat vehemently upon that house, and could not shake it, for it was founded upon a rock. But he that heareth, and doeth not, is like a man that, without a foundation, built a house upon the earth, against which the stream did beat vehemently, and immediately it fell, and the ruin of that house was great. I will stop there, friends.
A false assurance will lead to a false foundation, and a false foundation will lead men to build a righteousness of their own, and then they will join a church and spend years as an unconverted individual, hanging on to a false hope and a false faith. I know what I'm talking about, friends. I was a lost church member for years.
I taught a big Sunday school class in a big Baptist church, and I had a big opinion about myself. I liked to boast and brag about what I had and what I'd done, but I was as lost as that man sitting in the woods with his owl, and a man who is religious and lost can be dangerous. Just look up the scribes and the Pharisees in your Bible to see what I mean.
Then one day I saw that I was on my way to hell, and not only that, but I deserved to go there. Well, I became a seeker of God that day. I threw down my shotgun of rebellion that day, friend.
I surrendered all I was to all Christ was that day, and bless God, he saved me. Whatever you do, friend, don't end up like the hypocrites found in Isaiah who found out too late that they were deceived. In Isaiah 33, 14, we read, Lord, repent before it's too late.
Sermon Outline
-
I
- Definition and dislike of hypocrisy
- Examples of religious hypocrisy
- The danger of empty professions of faith
-
II
- False assurance and the modern easy-believe gospel
- Faith in Christ versus misplaced trust
- The prevalence of hypocrites in churches today
-
III
- The parable of the wise and foolish builders (Luke 6)
- The consequences of a false foundation
- The need for genuine faith and obedience
-
IV
- Personal testimony of being a lost church member
- The danger of religious but lost individuals
- Call to repentance and true salvation
Key Quotes
“Nobody likes a hypocrite, but oftentimes a religious hypocrite can't see themselves for what they are, and that's deceived.” — E.A. Johnston
“Faith in a chair is not saving faith in Christ Jesus.” — E.A. Johnston
“A false assurance will lead to a false foundation, and a false foundation will lead men to build a righteousness of their own.” — E.A. Johnston
Application Points
- Examine your heart to ensure your faith is genuine and not merely a religious profession.
- Do not rely on emotional experiences or church membership as proof of salvation.
- Build your life on the solid foundation of Christ through obedience and true repentance.
